Sir Keir Starmer will warn he is making tough decisions towards a “new Britain” and cannot offer “false hope” about the challenges ahead.
He will address Labour delegates in Liverpool today at 2pm in his first party conference speech as prime minister.
But after he privately acknowledged that he needs to lift the spirits of the nation, he will say there is “light at the end of this tunnel”.
Sir Keir is expected to announce plans for new legislation in his keynote, including a “Hillsborough Law” which will introduce a legal duty of candour on public bodies and a new Fraud, Error and Debt Bill which will see welfare fraudsters dealt with faster.
The Labourgovernment has recently faced heavy criticism over its winter fuel allowance cut and gifts accepted by ministers.
Rachel Reeves is understood to be considering cuts to the welfare budget as part of her money-saving Budget to spend more on investment.
If the plan goes ahead, the state benefits budget could be reduced by helping more people get back to work which would lower the bill for income-related sickness benefits and universal credit.
The Independent’s political team will be reporting live throughout the Labour Party conference in Liverpool.
Exclusive: Labour accused of censoring pro-Palestinian activists at conference
Labour has been accused of censoring pro-Palestinian activists at its party conference after ordering a group to remove the words “genocide” and “apartheid” from the listing for an event about Israel’s war in Gaza.
The party was condemned by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) for refusing to promote its fringe event titled “Justice for Palestine: Confronting genocide and ending apartheid”.
The event has been listed in the brochure as simply “Justice for Palestine”.
Our political correspondent Archie Mitchell reports:
Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 08:43
Atkins: Labour lost control of public sector pay process
Shadow health secretary Victoria Atkins has been speaking to Kay Burley on Sky News as part of the media round this morning.
Unsurprisingly, the Tory MP has criticised Labour after nurses in England rejected the government’s 5.5 per cent pay offer.
She said: “The Labour government has lost control of the independent public sector pay process.”
Ms Atkins insisted she was warned about an “impact across the workforce” of awarding “inflation-busting pay rises” to one part of the health sector.
She added: “Is it any wonder that having given this inflation-busting pay rise with no reform, no productivity improvements, for junior doctors in the summer, that nurses and other health care professionals are now asking why they are not valued in the same way.”
Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 08:43
McFadden says people in the Middle East should live in peace after Israeli attack on Lebanon
Pat McFadden has said that everybody in the Middle East needs to be able to live in peace, after the death toll from Israeli strikes on Lebanon has risen to nearly 500 people.
The chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster told LBC: “What needs to happen in the long run is that everybody in this region can live in security. We tend to focus on the immediate hostilities, the immediate outbreak, and I understand in a news sense why we do that.
“But if you’re asking me about the longer term, we want everybody in that particular part where all this shelling is going on at the moment to be able to return home in peace.
“There’s 60,000 Israelis who have not been able to live in their homes for the best part of a year now because of this back and forth shelling from Hezbollah and southern Lebanon, but also the people in southern Lebanon to be able to live in peace without this threat of constant war back and forth over the border.”
He later added: “Right now it is the most dangerous situation that I can remember in the Middle East for a long, long time.”
Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 08:26
PM: Labour’s plan for change will be ‘tough in the short-term’
Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 08:24
McFadden denies plans to change pub licensing rules to force them to shut early
Pat McFadden has denied that there are plans to change pub licensing rules to force them to shut early.
Speaking to Nick Ferrari on LBC’s Breakfast programme, he denied a report in the Telegraph that venues could be targeted under measures to cut down on harmful drinking.
Andrew Gwynne, the public health minister, had told a Labour Party fringe event that the government was considering “tightening up the hours of operation” of bars and pubs.
Mr McFadden, the chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, said: “I don’t think there’s any plan to shut the pubs early. The pub is a great part of British life. I don’t have a drink during conference, partly so I can look forward to having a nice one when the conference is over and I hope that the pub will be open when I go in.”
He told Mr Ferrari that his drink of choice after the conference ends on Wednesday would be a pint of Guinness.
It comes as public health minister Andrew Gwynne said the government is considering “tightening up the hours of operation” of bars and pubs as part of an attempt to improve health and combat anti-social behaviour.
Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 08:21
Pubs could be forced to close early as Labour considers crackdown on opening hours
Pubs could be forced to call last orders early under new measures to target harmful drinking.
Public health minister Andrew Gwynne said the government is considering “tightening up the hours of operation” of bars and pubs as part of an attempt to improve health and combat anti-social behaviour.
But Mr Gwynne insisted Labour is “not the fun police” nor “supernanny”, instead saying the measures would be driven by both moral and economic arguments.
Our political correspondent Millie Cooke has the full story:
Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 08:15
John McDonnell accuses Labour of copying George Osborne’s narrative
Ahead of Sir Keir Starmer’s speech, several prominent MPs are offering their opinions on what has been dubbed as a “really big historic moment”.
First to go is John McDonnell, who had his Labour whip removed for voting to scrap the two-child benefit cap.
The former shadow chancellor, who is now serving as an independent MP, is unimpressed by the narrative of the party and has compared the wording used during the conference by ministers to George Osborne.
He told Radio 4’s Today programme: “I don’t say this lightly, but if you close your eyes and listen to he language being used, it’s almost like George Osborne speaking again in 2010.
“The rhetoric of ‘tough choices, painful decisions’ – it’s literally replica of a speech made by George Osborne.”
Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 08:11
Pictured: Labour merchandise on sale at the party conference in Liverpool
Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 08:06
Rachel Reeves ‘considering’ cuts to welfare budget
Rachel Reeves is understood to be considering cuts to the welfare budget as part of her money-saving budget to spend more on investment.
If the plan goes ahead, the state benefits budget could be reduced by helping more people get back to work which would lower the bill for income-related sickness benefits and universal credit.
Work and pensions secretary Liz Kendall told the Labour conference at a fringe event the government was planning “really big reforms” of welfare and job centres at the October budget.
And to further fuel speculation, chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster refused to rule out the cuts during his media round on Sky News this morning.
Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 07:57
Labour not ruling out future cuts to welfare
During his interview on Sky News, the chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster failed to rule out possible cuts to the welfare budget.
When asked by Kay Burley about the 30 October budget, Pat McFadden said it will be a “good platform for the future of the country”.
But when pressed whether ministers will consider cuts to the welfare budget, he did not address the question.
He said: “She won’t start from that point of view, but she will start by saying that there are too many people on long term sickness benefits.
“What can we do to get people back into work and there is some fraud in the system to which we are going to act on.
“It’s really important that if money is spent on benefits, it goes to those who are genuinely in need of it. And where there’s fraud in the system that we try to root that out.
“That’s two things that we do want to do, to get people back to work and to make sure that money spent in this system goes to those who are genuinely in need of it.”
Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 07:38